With the war drawing to an end, and
the U-boat campaign against allied merchant shipping in shambles, Heinz
Schaeffer reevaluated his martial spirit and exercised tactics to
maximize his chances for survival. The war was going badly on all fronts
and no amount of propaganda could hide it. In the end, he turned his
U-977 toward Argentina. First time novelist Charles McCain captures this
building sense of desperation and gloom felt by the German military as
they tried to persevere against the crushing Allied forces.

An Honorable German
introduces the reader to Oberleutnant Max Breckendorf aboard the Graf
Spee. The Kriegsmarine is finding success against the Royal
Navy, raiding merchant ships with pocket battleships and a growing
U-boat fleet. Max, and his life-long friend, the engineering officer
Dieter, are men of duty and discipline, wholly committed to the military goals of
the Third Reich. Max holds a formidable store
of contempt for the British and gives little thought to the basis for
the war. His focus is on his career and his tasks. The Graf Spee
employs the tricks established by the Royal Navy, confusing the enemy
with false flags, and scooping up merchants at will. Max and Dieter
command boarding parties that round up the crews and capture British
officers, who are treated with honor and ceremony. The Prizes Rules are
closely followed; Germany's grim future is yet to appear.

As history dictates, Max's career
aboard the Graf Spee is scuttled in Rio de la Plata, and we next
find the opportunistic young officer aboard the German merchant raider
Meteor, continuing to wreak mayhem. McCain creates characters that the reader cares about,
and this is achieved through the
engaging interplay between Max and Dieter. Their camaraderie is genuine
with effortless humor and charm.

After a series of ordeals that
nearly kill him, Max lands in occupied Paris and is reunited with
his sweetheart, Mareth. Her place in the novel is primarily to serve as
the base for Max's concern. Her family is a class above Max and his
family, her father one of the early supporters of the Nazis and
well-established in the political arena. The City of Light is anything
but a friendly place--intrigue and danger are thinly concealed by the
stony faces of the populace. Max's luck nearly runs out when he
inadvertently crosses up a Gestapo agent.

McCain serves out a strong sense of
foreboding with the shadowy hand of the Gestapo and the effect it
has on Hitler's dominions. Even decorated war heroes like Max are
inconsequential in the face of the Nazi regime. Fear and violence stream
from the top of the Nazi power structure to trap the Germans between
their own government and the enemy. Max is clearly insulated from the
political realities and is notably shocked as Mareth makes it clear that
the Gestapo constitute as much of a threat as the British. Max's
self-assuredness is shaken, and doubts arise.

As it happens, Mareth's father, no
big supporter of Max, is able to intervene and Max continues his odyssey
in the Atlantic as the commander of U-114. He's all business, intent on
seeking out the fat convoys that made Prien, Krethscmer, and Schepke top
aces. But true to his luck, the "Happy Times" have passed and in one
gripping scene his hapless
U-boat gets pasted but good by British destroyers.

A terrible exhaustion gripped Max.
All night he had twisted and turned the boat, never knowing if he was
right or wrong until the depth charges exploded, and always the ping of
the British sonar, the creaking of his battered boat, the hoarsely
shouted damage reports. Sweat drenched him completely. Before they
sailed, Lehmann had told the crew, "The Fuhrer expects you men to be
quick as greyhounds, tough as leather, hard as Krupp steel." Max liked
the sound of that as much as anyone, but after the hours of depth
charging it seemed absurd. Half his sailors were terrified and in a
handful of moments so was he.

The author builds each scene with precision and
economy, his narrative is forceful and direct. The U-boat scenes are
strongly reminiscent of Das Boot. Drawing on an obviously impressive amount of research, McCain grounds
the novel well, in the technical sense of the machinery of the ships and
U-boats, as well as the events and setting of wartime Germany. It is
when the scene shifts to Berlin that An Honorable German (the title, remarkable only in its assertion that such a person is
unusual and noteworthy) really mines the richest emotional ore of the
novel.

Mareth works in a bunker that houses a flak battery.
As the RAF bombing barrages inflict appalling damage to the capital,
McCain's novel unveils the brutal events of total war.

The RAF had a method for this, the murder of a city, a method
so terrible it was worthy only of Gog and Magog. They began with
blockbuster high-explosive bombs to blow the roofs off buildings
and blow the windows in, exposing wooden beams and interiors,
giving fire endless pathways along which to spread and providing
through-drafts of air to rush it along. Then came the small
incendiary bombs, falling in their hundreds of thousands into
buildings; and then the fires began. Fires medieval in their
terror; fires that could not be extinguished because they were
composed of burning phosphorus; liquid fire that flowed in burning
streams down gutters and into the basements where women and
children took shelter; fire so terrible, fire so merciless, there
was nothing to do but run from it with all the strength God had
given you; fire spreading so fast that running with all your
strength was never enough. Fire so hot it set the very asphalt in
the street ablaze and if your feet became stuck in the liquid tar,
you burned like a torch, your screams unheard over the roaring of
the firestorm. This was the hell brought down on Hamburg by the
Tommies, and now they were bringing it to Berlin. And Mareth was
somewhere in that godforsaken pyre, its columns of poisonous
yellow smoke twisting slowly into the heavens.

As Max's U-boat career progresses
and he straddles a stark line between survival and extinction, he finds
no glory in his duty. His doubt gives way to fear and when faced with an
awful choice between duty and honor, it's with an almost tangible sense
of relief he makes his fateful choice. An Honorable German was
great pleasure to read, as much for its straight-forward story as for
the residue it leaves in the mind. It's with a thankful nod that this
reviewer points out that An Honorable German is not simply a
story about a naval officer or a U-boat, as much as it is about the
terrible price, psychologically and materially and with loss of life,
that the German people paid for succumbing to a megalomaniacal
dictatorship.

This book comes out May 28, 2009.

Subsim Father's Day Giveaway,
June 16, 2009

The folks at Hachette Book Group have generously offered to give
out 5 signed copies of Charles McCain's new novel An Honorable
German. If you haven't picked up a copy yet, here's an easy chance
to get one. It's a fine novel, well-written and interesting.

To win your copy, simply PM Neal Stevens with the following bits
of info from the review of An Honorable German:

The name of Max's friend
Which U-boat Max commanded
The name of Max's sweetheart